One House Music’s New EP Hopes To Be Christian Music for a Non-Christian Audience

One House
One House Music. Courtesy photo

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(RNS) — With an eclectic mix of R&B, pop, gospel and hip-hop, the new EP “Eyes Up” from One House Music, a collective from the Los Angeles-based church One: A Potter’s House Church, is explicitly designed for non-Christians.

The mainstream electronic sounds are paired with messages about relying on God, overcoming addiction and finding courage in dark times. And the counterintuitive combination seems to be working: “I’d Be Lying,” an Afrobeats-inspired single featuring U.K. Christian musician Sondae and Grammy-winning songwriter and music leader Mitch Wong, has already been featured on Spotify’s hugely popular New Music Friday playlist.

“I’d be lying, I’d be lying if I said I don’t need your love,” the chorus repeats over a syncopated dance beat. “I’d be lying, I’d be lying if I said I don’t need you, God.”

Touré Roberts, who co-leads the church with his wife, Sarah Jakes Roberts (daughter of Bishop T.D. Jakes) and founded the One House music label in 2020, said he never imagined being an influential church leader shepherding a music collective.

“If you would have told me that I’d be doing it about 25 years ago, I would ask you what you had been smoking and where I might inquire about how to get some,” Roberts joked in a recent interview with Religion News Service.

Roberts wields his background in tech and entrepreneurship as a successful online preacher and on the ground in North Hollywood, where his church is known to attract people from every sector of the entertainment industry, including the likes of Tyler Perry, Mariah Carey and Chance the Rapper. But while Roberts’ style is practical and approachable, he believes One House Music can take that relatability a step further.

“We recognize that not everyone is ready for the Hallelujah song, to lift their hands,” said Roberts, who added that One House Music aims to “meet them with melodies and lyrics that can reach a broad audience.”

One House producer and music director Brunes Charles, who was working for the “Dr. Phil” show when he first joined One Church in 2017, came up with the idea to do a pop/R&B record after One House Music’s debut worship album, “Live Again,” which was released earlier this year.

“There are times I’ve been in church, in my younger days, and I’d leave feeling the same thing. My questions and prayers didn’t get answered. I still felt broken, still didn’t feel close to God, still struggling,” said Charles. “We’re hoping it will allow people to rip off the mask, and not feel shameful for sharing where they are honestly at in their walk of life.”

The song “Last Time,” which features vocals from Roberts’ 20-year-old son, Isaiah Roberts, encapsulates the transparency and vulnerability of the EP. In July, Charles invited Isaiah Roberts to join other collaborators in an LA studio for a songwriting camp, and the group began brainstorming a song about repentance. The topic instantly hit home with Isaiah Roberts, who told RNS he has his “own testimony with struggling with addiction.” In two days, the group had finished “Last Time,” a single that’s since had over 150,000 streams across platforms.

“If I told you I was done, would you ever believe me? I know that we’ve been here a million times,” Isaiah Roberts sings in the song’s chorus. “And I only want freedom, from all these demons I try to hide.”

Isaiah Roberts said he’s been amazed by the early success of the song, which is his first professional release. He added that he’s been “pretty much crying after every DM” he’s received from listeners.

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KathrynPost@churchleaders.com'
Kathryn Post
Kathryn Post is an author at Religion News Service.

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